Results 201 to 210 of about 299,181 (381)
Abstract Periphyton plays an important functional role in shallow lakes and is sensitive to variation in nutrient availability and global warming. Understanding the responses of periphyton to changes in nutrient availability in contrasting warming scenarios can contribute to the development of more efficient techniques for the restoration of lakes in a
Olivera Stamenković+4 more
wiley +1 more source
The Chromosomes of Six Melaniid Snails (Gastropoda: Prosobranchia)
J. Jacob
openalex +2 more sources
Seasonal variation in bay‐marsh sediment exchange through a back‐barrier salt marsh tidal creek
Abstract Salt marsh resilience to sea‐level rise largely depends on the balance of sediment exchanges with surrounding bays. In this study, we investigate mechanisms that determine residual sediment fluxes using continuous measurements of bay‐marsh sediment exchange conducted in a tidal creek spanning 13 months (753 tidal cycles) in an intertidal marsh
Gregg A. Snedden, S. Jarrell Smith
wiley +1 more source
XXVI.—Description of a New Species or Variety of Land Snail from California. [PDF]
Robert E. C. Stearns
openalex +1 more source
Carbon sedimentation in shallow floodplain lakes
Abstract Shallow lakes are increasingly recognized as important sites for organic carbon (OC) storage. However, the drivers of OC deposition in shallow floodplain lakes remain unclear due to complex terrestrial and aquatic interactions. Using 8 yr of monthly sediment trap data in a cross‐ecosystem experiment on six UK shallow lakes of varying riverine ...
Belén Franco‐Cisterna+7 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Identifying drivers of consumer biomass patterns and community structure is complex for managed freshwater ecosystems that are sensitive to nutrients and drought. In the Florida Everglades, flow restoration is expected to reintroduce discharge across an expansive wetland, yet most research on consumers has focused on water depth and dry ...
Marco Fernandez+4 more
wiley +1 more source
Century‐scale resilience of stored seagrass blue carbon
Abstract Blue carbon sequestration in coastal ecosystems is only relevant to climate change mitigation and carbon offset crediting if the carbon is taken out of circulation for at least a century. Here, we examined sediment cores, up to 2.2 m deep, collected in modern Zostera marina seagrass meadows in Mid‐Atlantic lagoons in Virginia, USA.
Peter Berg+12 more
wiley +1 more source